Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 14, 1911, Page 2

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THE BEMIDJT DAILY PIONEER Published every afternoon except Sun- 'y by ‘the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing mpany. @. E. CARSON. E. H. DENU. F. A. WILSON, Editor. In the City of Bemidji the papers are delivered by carrier. Where the deliy. ery is irregular please make immediate complaint to this office, Telephone 31, Out of town subscribers will confer a favor if they will report when they do not get their papers promptly. N AlL papers are continued until an ex- plicit order to discontinue is received, and until arrearages are paid. ' Subscription Rate: One month, by carrier, Une year, by carrier. . Three months, postage Months, postage pai One "year, postage paid. The Weekly Pioneer. Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for $1.50 in advance. ENTERED AS SECOND CLA AT- TBR AT THE g(%%xguv‘mcmsi'rméa MARCH 3, 1879, Do THE ACT OF S paid. id PPOOOIPOOODOND OO @ THIS DATE IN HISTORY. © & @ o October 14. © ® 1644—William Penn, the colon- ® er of Pennsylvania, & o born. Died July 30, & @ 1718. @ # 1761—Sir Edward Hawké, the & - British admiral who & K3 frustrated the attempt ¢ - of the French to invade & | England, died. Born in & o 1715. @ » 1806—Napoleon defeated the ® <] Prussians at Jena and & & advanced on Berlin. @ © 1817—John Philpot Curran, @ ® famous Irish orator, @ B died. Born in 1750. @ B 7—Sir William Veron Har- & » court English states- © - man, born. Died Oct. & & 1, 1504, @ “ 1842 —New York celebrated & - the completion of the = Croton water works. @ “ 1850-—A convention to revise & @ the constitution of Vir- & o ginia assembled at Rich- & o mond. ® 4 1886—The Pennsylvania Con- & ® gregational Association ¢ @ was organized. @ ¥ 1910—Legislature of Colorado & - enacted a direct-primary 6/‘ @ law. @ ® _ @ ® October 15, @ # 1612—Champlain arrived in & B Canada to take up his & ® work as governor of the @ @ country. @ ® 1711—British warship Edgar & @ blew up at Spithead, ® 3 with loss of her entire @ % crew. @ @ 1793—Austrians defeated the & I French {n Dbattle of & “ Tirlemont. @ 1805—Willelm von Kaulbach, ® © famous German painter, ® @ born. Died April 7, ® g 1874. & 1840—Attempt made to assassi- & nate King Louis 5 Philippe of France. @ 1860—The Sardinian army @ Victor Emmanuel en- ? tered - the kingdom of @ Naples. 41890-——International Brother- @ hood of Locomotive En- % gineers organized at . Pittsburgh. = 1894—A memorial to Sir John ® A. Macdonald was un- @ veiled in Toronto, 1910—Ramon Baros Luco was elected President of ® Chile. DOOOOOPOOOOOO®OS® QPO PDPVPORIPIDPOOOOL S NEWS FORECAST FOR THE COMING WEEK. At Los Angeles Monday President aft will enter upon the last week but one of his transcontinental tour. After two days in the southern Cali- Tornia metropolis he will through Utah, Montana, Wyoming and South Dakota, speaking at a number of the chief cities in each State and winding up in Pierre, S. travel D., where he will stay over Sunday. P A conference of progressive Re- publicans has been called to meet in Chicago during the week for the purpose of guaging the extent of the movement and the future conduct of It is expected the attendance will include nearly all of the progressive Repub- lican members of Congress and other the work of the organization. party leaders who are opposed to the renomination of President Taft. % Some of the most important men in the financial world are expected to appear before the House committee that is investigating the United States Steel Corporation, when it ré- assembles in Washington on Monday. While the committee has not made public its list of prospective witness- es, it has been rumored for some that Mr. Carnegie and Mr. Morgan will be called upon to tell what they know of the formation of the steel trust. time e w Judge Landis in the United States district court at Chicago will hear arguments Monday in the motion to quash indictments against Albert C. Frost, promoter of the Chicago and Milwaukee Electric road and George A. Ball, charged with conspiracy to defraud the Government of $10,000,- 000 of Alaska coal lands. * xow . postponed ‘ouster suit against the Hocking Valley Railroad is scheduled for hearing by the Ohio supreme court on Tuesday. %% % A magnificent bronze equestrian statue of Gen. John H. Morgan, the noted Confederate cavalry leader, will be unveiled with interesting ceremonies Tuesday in the house square in Lexington, Ky. LR R court- Republicans of Rhode Island will meet in State convention Wednesday to name a ticket to be voted for at the November election. No.opposi- tion exists to the renomination of CGovernor Aram J. Pothier. T Bishop Tuttle of St. Louis will officiate at the consecration of Rév. Dr. Thomas Frederick Davies, Jr., as bishop of the Episcopal diocese of Western Massachusetts, which will take place Wednesday in All Saints’ Church, Worcester. *ox w Three prominent colleges of the country will inaugurate new presi- dents during the week. They are Miss Ellen F. Pendleton of Wellesley College, Dr. George E. Vincent of the University of Minnesota, and Dr. Lemuel H. Murlin of Boston Univer- sity. o % The convention calendar for the weex will include the annual meet- ings of the National Woman Suffrage Association at Louisville, the Inter- Congress at Colorado Springs, the.Atlantic Deep- er Waterways Association at Rich- national Dry Farming mond, the American Prison Associa- tion at Omaha, the Brotherhood of St. Andrew at Buffalo and the Society of the Army of the Cumberland at Chattanooga. e Other events of the progress of interest will be the Glidden auto- mobile tour, the series of games for the world’s baseball championship, and the continuation of the jubilee celebration in Baltimore in honor of Cardinal Gibbons. Ancients’ New War Bonnet, The Ancients have decided to sub- stitute for their helmet a cap of Ger- man pattern. A move for lightening equipment is general throughout the military world.—Boston Record. You are not experimenting on yourself when you take Chamber- lain’s Cough Remedy for a cold as that preparation has won its great reputation and extensive sale by its remarkable cures of colds, and can always be depended upon. It is equal- ly valuable for adults and chiidren and may be giveh to voung children with implicit confidence as it con- tains no harmful drug. Sold bv Bar- ker's Drug Store. DEEPEST SLEEP. It Always Occurs During the First Hour of Slumber. “Yes,” said the doctor, “sleep is a very puzzling mystery. Nobody knows what the cause of it is, but we do know that it is always accompanied by anaemia of ‘the brain. In other words, when you sleep the blood drains away from the head to the limbs. If you fell asleep on a bal- anced bed, the moment you dropped off the foot of the bed would begin to sink, and the deeper the sleep the greater the slant. “That is why a hot bath tends to sleepiness. It brings the blood to the skin and so lessens the supply in the brain. Curiously enough, great cold has the same effect and for the same reason. You know how cold swells and reddens the hands. “Recent experiments have shown | conclusively how pale and bloodless{ the brain grows in sleep. How? ‘Well, a piece of bone has been remov- ed from the skull of a puppy_and a watchglass inserted instead. The mo- ment the puppy under observation wakes its brain at once grows pink again. Noj; the puppy doesn’t seem to mind it. “Experiments made by dropping heavy balls have shown that sleep is always at its deepest in the first hour. After that unconsciousness gets shal- lower and shallower.” —London An- swers. Lame back is oxne of the most com- mon forms of muscular rheumatism. A few applications of Chamberlain’s Liniment will give relief. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. A Nut and a Joke. A nut and a joke are alike in that they can both be cracked and differ- ent in that the joke can be cracked agqln.—mppincott‘s. = The world is a wheel, and it will all come around right,—Disraell. In the Point of View. Her Husband—You spend altogether too much money. Mrs. Whooper-Rupp ~—Not at all.. The trouble is you don’t make enough.—Exchange. Shake not the credit of others in endeavoring to establish your own. Don’t trifie with a cold is good ad- vice for prudent men and women. It may. be vital in case of a child. There is nothing better than Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for coughs and colds The long pending and: frequently, in children. It is safe and sure; For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. A Hotel Experience. “There are two classes of arrivals who ask you to register for them,” said.| a hotel clerk yesterday. ‘“One is the woman with tight gloves who really cannot write. The other is the men who arrive after 11 p. m. and who say: | *Just register (hic), old man, will you? Been carrying this grip and m' band's 80 nervous I conldn't hold a pen.’”— New York Sun. Lost Days. “You used to say.” she complained. “that you counted that day lost when you did not hear the sound of my voice.” = “Yes, 1 know.” he replied. *and ! shall never cease to long for those dea: Inat davs.”—Chicago Record-Herald RESTORE GRAY HAIR- Remedy for Dandruff, Falling; Fad= ed, Gray Hair, The old idea of using sage for darkening the hair is again coming in vogue. Our grendmothers used to have dark, glossy hair at the age of seventy-five, while our mothers have white hair before they are fifty. Our grandmothers used to make a “sage tea” and apply it to their hair. The tea made their hair soft and glossy, and gradually restored the natural color, One objection to using such a prep- aration was the trouble of making it, especially as it had to be made every two or three days, on account of souring quickly. This objection has been overcome, and by asking almost any first-class druggist for Wyetih’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy the public can get a superior preparation of sage, with the admix- ture of sulphur, another valuable remedy for hair and scalp troubles. Daily use of this preparation will not only quickly restore the color of the hair, but will also stop the hair from falling out and make it grow. Gat a bottle from your druggist to- day. Use it and see for yourself how quickly dandruff goes and gray hairs vanish, This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold.by all drug- gists. REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. M wit] SCOTHIS the CHILD, SOF ALLAYSall PAIN ; CURES WIND COLIC, is tie best remedy’for DIARRHGEA. _ it is ab- lutely harmless. Be sure and ask for “Mrs. slow’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no othes sind - Twenty-five centsa bottle. TIMBER SALE—RED LAKE IN- DIAN RESERVATION. Red Lake, Minnesota, September 1, 1911. Sealed proposals in tripli- cate, each envelope marked “Propo- sal for timber, Red Lake Reserva- tion,” will be received until 12 o’clock noon. Central Time, Thurs- day, November 9, 1911, for the pur- chase of approximately 7,500,000 feet of pine timber on the Red Lake Indian Reservation, Minnesota. This timber is upon portions of sections 11, 12, 13 and 14, T. 150 N, R. 35 W.; sections 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17 and 18, T. 150 N., R. 34 W., and sec- tions 28 and 33, T. 151 N, R. 33 W. About 2,500,000 feet of the timber offered for sale is white pine and about 5,000,000 feet Norway pine. Only timber which has been injured by fire will be sold. However, all of it is of good quality and it is all accessible to a railroad or Red Lake. The minimum prices which will be accepted are $6.00 per M. for Norway pine and $8.00 per M. for white pine. The timber must be cut under regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior. The right of the Secretary of the Interior to waive technical defects in adver- tisements and bids and to reject any and all bids is reserved. Further in- formation as to the timber, and cop- ies of the approved form of contract may be obtained upon request from William H. Bishop, Superintendent Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake, Minnesota. (Authority—Office of Indian Af- fairs; received Aug. 30, 1911; file 76054). ) FOR SALE A small but well equipped and established legal NEWSPAPER AND JOB PLANT in town of about 500 in one of the richest counties in North- ern Minnesota. A large field, only five papers in county. Paper did $645 worth of coun- ty publishing last year. Plant and building and lot they oc- cupy can be bought for $900 cash- or $500 down and $450 long time, 8 per cent interest. This is good paying business but takes too much time away from my local business to look after it. 2 A. L. LaFreniere | Grand Rapias - 1 10 NATURAL COLGR By Common Garden Sage, a Simple' Fuotus by American Press Assoctation. numbers upward of a dozen. are seen in the picture below The aeroplane has a permanent place in the military and naval systems of the United States. maintains an aviation training school, and a number of skilled aviators have been turnea out there. Formidable Corps of Skilled 'Aviatoré Is a Valuable Auxiliary to Uncle Sam's Army and Navy. A Correction. In a town of such size that every one knows every one else it is often customary to speak of people by their first names, even when one would not do so to their faces. The butcher is known as Joe Smith, the grocer as Frank Parsons, the lawyer as Will An- drews, and_po offense is meant or taken: One day a friend was helping a teacher of the industrial school to put hats and coats on forty little mem- bers of the kindergarten class. Two little tow headed girls attracted her attention, and as she tied their hoods she asked: “Are you Charlle Porters little girls?” Two serious little blue eyes looked up ‘as the elder replied: “His name was Charlic when he was a little boy. He's Mr. Porter now.”— Exchange. An Artist’s Trials, Brownly—Dauber certainly has his own troubles. Pinder—Why, I thought he was do- ing splendidly. Brownly—He was until he painted that last landscape. He painted the sun in too natural. Pinder—How could that be? Brownly—Well, it dries up the water in the pond so fast.that he has to paint in new water every two or three days.—New York Times. SOAPS EXTRACTS & SPICES and the famous TURKISH RETEDIES Place your order with GHRIST M. JOHNSON Nymore, Minn. Box 56 ‘The government The list already Prominent among these are Captain Chandler and Lieutenant Henry H. Arnold, who are shown in the picture at the top, and Lieutenant Roy Carrington Kirtland and Lieutenant T. DeWitt Milling, who 0000200000000 © LODGEDOM IN BEMIDII ¢ 9000000000066 000 e 4. 0. T. W. Bemidji Lodee No. 217, Reecular meetin; G nights—first and c..i; Monday, -at 8 o’clock, —at_Odd Fellows hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. B. P. 0. E. Bemidji Lodge No. 1052, Regular meeting ni~hts— first and third Thursdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall, SBEnramx Ave, and Fifth C. 0. F. every second and fourta Sunday evening, at & o'clock in basement of Catholic church. DEGREE OF HONOR. Meeting nights every ! second and fourth Monday evenings, at 0Odd Fellows Hall. == “ P. 0. E. e — H { i Regular méeting nights every Wednesday evening at 8"o'clock. Kagles hall. G A B. ‘ Regular meetings—First and_ third_Saturday . after- noons, at 2:30—at Odd Fel- lows " Hall,” 402 RBeltrami ot Ry Ave. = I 0. 0. F. Bemidji Lodge No. 119 Regular meeting nights —every Friday, 8 o’clock at Odd Ieliows Hall, 402 Beltrami. I 0. O. F. Camp No. 24, Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at 8 o'clock, at Odd Fellows Hall. Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeting nights — first and third Wednesdays at § o'clock all. ENIGHTS OF PHYTHIAS. i Bemidji Lodge No. 168. § Regular meeting nighis—ev- i ery’ Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock—at the Bagles' Hall, ‘vhird street. LADIES OF THE MAC- H CABEES. Regular mecting night last Wednesday evening i in each month. OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER e 58 618 Amarica Ave, SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Offlce Phona 12 MASONIC. A. F. & A, M, Bemidji, 233 " Regular miceting nights — Tirst and third Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at @. BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- day1ito 12a.m., 1to 6 p.m., 7 to 9 p. m. Sunday 3 to 6 p.m. Monday 7to 9 p. Masonic “Hall, = Beltrami Ave, and Fifth St. Bemidji _Chanter No. 70, . A. M. Stated convocations ;—first and third_Mondays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Hall Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidji, Minn. YENDOME The Minneapolis Dollar-Hotel 180 MODERN ROOMS Located in Heart of Business District $1.00 EUROPLAN. RATE FOR TWO PERSONS $1.50 PRIVATE BATH AND TOILET EXTRA EVERY ROOM HAS HOT AND COLD RUNNING STEAM HEAT, WATER, LIGHTS, FLOOR, AND TELEPHONE SERVICE TO OF- FICE AND CITY. FINISHED PLATED PROOF ANNEX NOW COMPLETED. SINGLE RATE $1.00 GAS AND ELECTRIC PORCELAIN ' LAVATORY, PARQUET ALL BATH ROOMS ARE IN WHITE TILE WITH OPEN NICKEL PLUMBING. SEVEN-STORY FIRE- Phone 144 for the Transaction Insurance. Your Patronage Invited and Rentals your property with us. Huffman Harris & Reynolds Offers complete facilities every form of Legitimate = Real Estath, Loans,BondS - For quick results list wlkanah Commandery No. 30 K. T. Stated conclave—second £ B S aid fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock ! B & P. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel- P St. trami Ave., and Fifth O. E. S. Chapter No. 171. Regular meeting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic Hall, gzllrami Ave, and Fifth of M. B, A Roosevelt,” No. 1523 i Regular mieeting nights every second and fourth Thursday evenings at § o'clock in Odd - Fellows Hall, M. W. A 3 Bemid§i Camp No. 5012. Regular meeting nights — urst and third ‘uesdays at § o'clock _a Fellow: Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave, "~ MODERN SAMARITANS. Regular meeting nights on THE CROOKSTON WHOLESALE LUMBER: LATH AND BUILDING MATERIAL - Wholesalers of INKS PENS | PENCILS Wholesalers of TABLETS SCHOOL SUPPLIES STATIONERY Pioneer Pub. Go. Bemid]jl, Minn. Bemidi Fitzsimmons - Baldwin Company Successors to Melges Bro Co. Wholesale Fruits and Produce - Farmers Produce hought or sold on Commission. Quick returas . LUMBER GO, | NORTHERN _ GROCERY COMPANY WHOLESALE GROCERS C. E. BATTLES Light Engi Dealer’in and Heavy Hardware ne and Mill Supplies Smithing.Coal Mail Orders Solicited The Civen Bemidji Manufacturers, Wholesalers and Jobbers The Following Firms Are Thoroughly Reliable and Orders Sent to Them Will Be Promptiy Filled at Lowest Prices W. A McDONALD WHOLELALE [GE GREAM AND BAKERY 600DS Works and Office 315 Minn. Ave. WE ARE JOBBERS OF PIN TICKETS AND GUMMED LABELS No need to send outside of Bemidji for them Can Save you Money Hardware Co. Wholesale and Rétail Hardware 0 67 316 Minnasota Ave. Send your Mail Orders to and Jobbers lines of merchandise. shop in % THE Pioneer * Supply Store Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. GED. T. BAKER & CO. Manufacturing Jewelers They are especially prepared to promptly fill all orders in their various Largest stock of . Diamonds and Watches and the finest equipped work- Northern Minnesota, Speci: order work given prompt attention r the first and third Thursdays ;n the L 0. O. F. Hall at's SONS OF HERMAN. Meetings held second and fourth Sunday after- noon of each month at 205 Beltrami Ave. YEOMANS. Meetings the first Friday evening of the month at the home of Mrs. H. F. Schmidt, 306 Third street. <> R. F. MURPHY] FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER 13 Beitrami Ave. . Phone 319-2. First Mortgags| 'LOANS | ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTY Real Estate, Rentals ) Insurance William G. Kiein O’Leary-Bowser Bidg. Phone 19.

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